Category: Movies

  • Meatballs rule US box-office

    MUMBAI: In its opening weekend, animated 3D comedy Cloudy With A Chance Of Meatballs has topped the North American box-office romping in $30.1million.

    The film beat The Informant! that stars Matt Damon as a whistle blower with bipolar disorder. It opened in the second position with $10.5million. Last week‘s number one, Tyler Perry‘s I Can Do Bad All By Myself dropped to the third place garnering $10million.


    Jennifer Aniston romantic comedy Love Happens opened in fourth place.

    The film, co-starring Aaron Eckhart, grossed $8.5million.
    The top five was rounded out by horror film Jennifer‘s Body – also on its opening weekend – with $6.8million.


    Animated film 9 dropped to the number six position while Quentin Tarantino‘s Inglourious Basterds slipped four places to number seven. All About Steve slipped to eighth position while Sorority dropped three places to number nine and The Final Destination dropped to number 10.

  • The Cove director undeterred by arrest risk

    MUMBAI: Louie Psihoyos, the director of award-winning documentary The Cove about Japan‘s dolphin slaughter, has said that he would attend the screening of the film at the Tokyo film festival which opens on 17 October, knowing fully well that he could be arrested.

    Japanese police are of the view that the director and other members of his crew violated trespassing laws when they documented the hunt in the seaside town of Taiji, where 2,000 dolphins are killed every year.

    The film shows fishermen on small boats banging on poles to frighten the dolphins into a cove, where they are then killed with spears. The cove is closed off by barbed wire, and the film crew had to film much of the footage covertly.

    The Cove has won more than a dozen awards and led to an outpouring of outrage at the hunt. Initially, it wasn‘t part of the program for the Tokyo International Film Festival.

    Psihoyos said he wasn‘t concerned about getting arrested if it was for the right cause, saying he sees covert filming as a form of civil disobedience. He also says he disagrees with how Japanese authorities were defining trespassing, because the cove is in a national park.

  • Arpa Intl Film Festival declares highlights

    MUMBAI: The 12th annual Arpa International Film Festival will present over 50 films, post-screening receptions, and a star-studded closing night awards ceremony when it goes underway from 23 to 25 October at the legendary Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood.

    On October 23, the festival will present the long anticipated North American premiere of Haik Gazarian‘s Venezzia that stars two of Latin America ‘s hottest talents, Alfonso Herrera and Ruddy Rodriguez.

    Joining Gazarian at the red carpet premiere will be co-stars Herrera, one of Mexico‘s most popular actors and former member of the Grammy-nominated pop group RBD, and Rodriguez, a former Miss World Venezuela, whose more than two decades in television and film have garnered her a legion of devoted fans in the Spanish speaking world and beyond.

    More than 50 feature films, shorts, documentaries, music videos and animations will screen during the festival. “There‘s an incredible buzz around the films we‘ve been able to get this year. Our programming department tracked the global film festival scene for the last year and singled out the exemplary films relating to Armenians or made by Armenian filmmakers, says Arpa Festival director Alex Kalognomos.

    The documentary line up includes Anjar: Flowers, Goats and Heroes a film about the history of the people of Musa Dagh by Canadian-Armenian filmmaker Noura Kevorkian, Autumn of the Magician an homage to legendary Italian screenwriter Tonino Guerra and Armenia‘s official selection in the Best Foreign Language Film category for the 2010 Academy Awards; Komitas Hairig that tells the story of the beloved Komitas Vardapet; Husher a film which documents the testimony of Armenian Genocide survivors who settled in Italy; and Whispering Memories the story of a community of Armenians in Turkey who stayed behind during the genocide and silently converted to Islam.

    Among the competitive short film category are films like Hove starring Olympia Dukakis. Actor-Writer-Director Shant Hamassian‘s Spaceman on Earth, which debuted at this year‘s Cannes Film Festival will be featured in a program of shorts by Los Angeles filmmakers.

  • Virgin Media signs three-screen deal with Disney

    MUMBAI: Virgin Media has signed an agreement with Disney featuring a raft of new kids‘ content to be made available across Virgin Media‘s three entertainment platforms.

    The deal includes the addition of the recently launched Disney XD channel, TV on demand content including HD programming, as well as rights for a wide range of Disney shows to be made available online and via the mobile screen.

    With the addition of Disney content, Virgin Media will have over 300 hours of kids‘ content on demand from a broad range of content providers. Virgin Media has also secured rights for all three TV channels and on demand content to be to made available online.


    The TV on-demand offering will give families many popular shows to watch from all three Disney channels, including hit programmes such as Hannah Montana, Phineas and Ferb and Mickey Mouse Clubhouse.


    A whole range of original movies available on demand, including hits such as High School Musical


    , Camp Rock and the forthcoming Skyrunners are also part of the deal.

  • Harischandrachi Factory India’s official entry at the Oscars

    MUMBAI: Marathi film Harischandrachi Factory has been nominated as India‘s official entry to this year‘s Oscars in the Foreign Film Category. This was announced by the Film Federation of India (FFI) jury headed by veteran actress Asha Parekh.

    Sandeep Sawant‘s Shwaas (2004) was the last Marathi film to be at the Oscar.


    Initially twelve films were nominated but the jury unanimously voted for this film that shows the making of the country‘s first motion picture. Other films that were also in the running included Dev D, Dilli 6, Fashion, New York, Mee Shivajiraje Bhosale Boltoy, Kaminey, the to-be released What‘s Your Raashee? and the only offering from the South in T Hariharan‘s Malayalam film Pazhassi Raja starring Mamoothy.


    Harischandrachi Factory is on the making of Raja Harishchandra, India‘s first
    full-length feature film made in 1913 by Dadasaheb Phalke.The low-budget period film was completed in January and since has bagged a series of international awards and honours.


    Executive producer of Harischandrachi Factory Shrirang Godbole quipped, “in a few days we will meet the authorities of the FFI and decide upon the strategy for the film‘s publicity.”


    The film is scheduled to release by the year-end.

  • Reel world takes Rs 160 bn hit from piracy, seeks stringent laws

    MUMBAI: Stung by a loss of Rs 160 billion to piracy in 2008, the Indian entertainment industry needs to work out an effective legal system to combat the menace. In short, the ‘reel world‘ should meaningfully shake hands with law.

    “We need to have more regulation of content and should create more stringent and effective laws to stop the infringement of intellectual property in TV and cinema. But this cannot be a unilateral affair. The industry, the government and the lawmakers need to mutually discuss and agree on this,” said Ministry of Information & Broadcasting joint secretary (films), V B Pyarelal, while speaking here today at the third edition of ‘Reel World and the Law,‘ an annual seminar organised by CII.


    The idea of the government working jointly with the stakeholders to create a common pool of resources was taken forward by Big Music vice president Sanjay Tandon. “Piracy is widespread through video, cable, internet and rentals. Effective Digital Rights Management is virtually impossible in today‘s world. We need a perfect sync between the reel world and the law in order to have a happy ending to all our stories,” he said.


    For making that happen, the industry has been ‘more barking‘ rather than putting in serious efforts. A common pool of capital is yet to be created. The different industry bodies also need to come under one umbrella.


    Moser Baer COO G Dhananjayan has come up with another solution. “Though we make optical discs, I am of the view that the government should levy a tax of an optical disc by Rs 10 that would make piracy unviable. In return, the government can give some kind of relief to the film industry by reducing the entertainment tax. This measure will, on one hand, help in killing piracy while on the other will make cinema going less costly.”



    Saying that there was an increased complexity in the industry today due to the advent of more sophisticated technology, more segmentation and the coming of social media, Eros International Films executive director Biren Ghose said that there were wider avenues today for producers to raise capital – the industry having moved from traditional to institutional capital. There is also extensive regulation.


    “But all this poses increased challenges for the industry. How does one protect intellectual property in an age of the internet and control content in television and films,” Ghose asked.



    However, AZB and Partners managing partner Zia Mody was of the view that the acid test for the government today was to strike a balance between zealous protection of the Copyright law and encouraging innovation and creativity.


    “Ten years ago, there was an apathetic approach towards legal aspects of intellectual property rights. Today there is increased realization of value and monetization and IP infringement,” she averred.

  • Excel releases X-Men Origins: Wolverine on DVD and Blu-ray

    MUMBAI: Excel Home Videos and Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment have released X-Men Origins: Wolverine, starring Hugh Jackman, on Blu-ray disc and DVD.

    Directed by Gavin Hood (Rendition) and starring Hugh Jackman, the film is the fourth instalment of the X-Men film franchise and serves as a prequel to the previous instalments, being primarily set roughly ten to seventeen years before the film X-Men.

    This first chapter in the X-Men saga sinks its razor-sharp adamantium claws into the mysterious origins of Logan-Wolverine (Hugh Jackman): his epically violent and romantic past, his complex relationship with Victor Creed-Sabretooth (Liev Schreiber) and the ominous weapon X programme that unleashes his primal fury.

    The X-Men Origins: Wolverine is presented in widescreen on a 50GB dual-layer disc authored in BD-J with AVC (MPEG 4) compression with English 5.1 DTS HD master audio and has as an added feature: Wolverine Unleashed – deleted and alternate scenes.


    The DVD and Blu-ray disc is available at all leading stores for Rs 499 and Rs 1,199 respectively.

  • Zee Studio to host premiere of ‘Vicky Cristina Barcelona’ at PVR

    MUMBAI: In collaboration with the distributors of the film Weg Entertainment, movie channel Zee Studio will host the premiere of the Oscar award-winning film Vicky Cristina Barcelona on 24 September at PVR Cinemas, Juhu, Mumbai.

    The film figures amongst Zee Studio‘s most prized acquisitions for the year and the channel will announce a date for the premiere of the film in the months to come.


    The brioadcaster adds that the premiere will be a wine-and-cheese affair peppered with performances by exotic flamenco dancers, followed by the screening of the film. The premiere is expected to attract the glitterati and the movers and shakers of the film and media fraternity.



    Directed by Woody Allen, Vicky Cristina Barcelona follows two girlfriends on a summer holiday in Spain who get enamored by the same painter, unaware that his ex-wife, with whom he has a tempestuous relationship, is about to re-enter the picture.


    The film stars Penelope Cruz, Scarlett Johansson, Javier Bardem and Rebecca Hall. Cruz won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress.

  • Cinemax launches new property in Mumbai

    MUMBAI: Multiplex chain operator Cinemax has opened its new property at R-Mall Odeon in Ghatkopar, Mumbai. The four-screen multiplex has a total seating capacity of 1250.

    The multiplex opens with screening of Wanted and Dil Bole Hadippa. Out of the four screens, currently two screens with seating capacity of 580 are operational. The remaining two screens with capacity of 670 seats will be operational soon.


    With this launch, Cinemax takes its all-India tally to 25 properties with 78 screens and 21550 seats.

  • Anupam Kher to address students at Cambridge University

    MUMBAI: Anupam Kher has added another feather to his cap. After being acknowledged as one of the finest actors and acting teachers in India, his accomplishments have reached the International audience as well.

    Kher has been invited by the Cambridge University to give a lecture to the students and participants of the 29th Cambridge Film Festival on 19 September. He will be speaking on ‘How to Build and Orchestrate Transnational Creative Networks’ to a varied audience of students, participants and other luminary’s from various fields.

    The Cambridge Film Festival has been committed to delivering high quality independent films to the widest possible audience.


    The lecture and panel discussions are running in tandem with the 29th Cambridge Film Festival established in 1977.